CNN
investigation reports that, Ethiopia's government has used the country's
flagship commercial airline to shuttle weapons to and from neighboring Eritrea
during the bloody civil war in Ethiopia's Tigray region.
Cargo
documents and manifests seen by CNN, as well as eyewitness accounts and
photographic evidence, confirm that arms were transported between Addis Ababa's
international airport and airports in the Eritrean cities of Asmara and Massawa
on board multiple Ethiopian Airlines planes in November 2020 during the first
few weeks of the Tigray conflict.
It's
the first time this weapons trade between the former foes has been documented
during the war. Experts said the flights would constitute a violation of
international aviation law, which forbids the smuggling of arms for military
use on civil aircraft.
Atrocities
committed during the conflict also appear to violate the terms of a trade
program that provides lucrative access to the United States market and which
Ethiopian Airlines has benefited greatly from.
Ethiopian
Airlines is a state-owned economic powerhouse that generates billions of
dollars a year carrying passengers to hubs across the African continent and all
over the world, and it is also a member of the Star Alliance, a group of some
of the world's top aviation companies.
The
airline previously issued two denials about transporting weapons after an image which carry armed men showed up on social media.
Responding
to CNN's latest investigation, Ethiopian Airlines said it "strictly
complies with all National, regional and International aviation related
regulations" and that "to the best of its knowledge and its records,
it has not transported any war armament in any of its routes by any of its
Aircraft."
The
governments of Ethiopia and Eritrea did not respond to CNN's requests for
comment.
Military refills
Long-simmering
tensions between Ethiopia's government and the ruling party in the Tigray
region(TPLF) exploded on November 4, when Ethiopia accused the Tigray People's
Liberation Front of attacking a federal army base.
AbiyAhmed, Ethiopia's Nobel Peace Prize-winning prime minister, ordered a military
offensive to oust the TPLF from power. Government forces and regional militias
poured into Tigray, joined on the front lines by troops from Eritrea.
Thousands
of people are estimated to have died in the conflict, which by many accounts
bears the hallmarks of genocide and ethnic cleansing. While all sides have been
accused of committing grave human rights abuses during Tigray's war, previous
CNN investigations established that Eritrean soldiers have been behind some of
the worst atrocities, including sexual violence and mass killings. Eritrea has
denied wrongdoing by its soldiers and only admitted to having troops in Tigray
this spring.
Documents
obtained by CNN indicate that flights carrying weapons between Ethiopia and
Eritrea began at least as early as a few days after the outset of the Tigray
conflict.
On
at least six occasions -- from November 9 to November 28 -- Ethiopian Airlines
billed Ethiopia's ministry of defense tens of thousands of dollars for military
items including guns and ammunition to be shipped to Eritrea, records seen by
CNN show.
The
documents, known as air waybills, detail the contents of each shipment. In one
document, the "nature and quantity of goods" is listed as
"Military refill" and "Dry food stuff." Other entries
included the description "Consolidated." The records also had
abbreviations and spelling mistakes such as "AM" for ammunition and
"RIFFLES" for rifles, according to airline employees. They told CNN
the spelling errors were introduced when the contents were manually entered by
employees into the cargo database.
Benno
Baksteen, chairman of DEGAS, the Dutch Expert Group Aviation Safety, told CNN
that these waybills were required for all commercial flights as the crew on
board need to know the contents of the cargo to ensure they are transported
safely.
On
November 9, five days after Abiy ordered a military offensive in Tigray, records
show an Ethiopian Airlines flight transported guns and ammunitions from Addis
Ababa to Asmara, Eritrea's capital.
An
air waybill and a cargo manifest from that date show that Ethiopian Airlines
charged Ethiopia $166,398.32 for about 2,643 pieces of "DFS & RIFFLE
WITH AM (sic)" on that flight. DFS is a reference to "dry food
stuff," according to airline sources.
Another
air waybill from a few days later, November 13, has the same shipper and
consignee. The content of that shipment was "military refill and dry food
stuff," according to the document. The shipments came at a time of
increased military activity; security sources in the region told CNN the
Eritreans needed re-supply for the fight in Tigray.
As
planes went back and forth between the two countries, massacres of Tigrayans in
the city of Axum and the village of Dengelat by Eritrean troops took place on
November 19 and November 30 respectively.
Cargo
documents show that the series of flights between Ethiopia and Eritrea
continued until at least November 28, 2020.
Some
current and former Ethiopian Airlines employees, who spoke on condition of
anonymity for fear of repercussions, said the flights continued past this date
but that the majority of arms trips to Eritrea were in November.
Both
cargo and passenger planes were used in the operation, though CNN has no
evidence that commercial passengers were on any of the flights carrying
weapons. Many of these flights do not appear on popular online flight tracking
platforms such as Flightradar24. When they do, the destination in Eritrea is
often not visible and the flight path vanishes once the plane crosses the
border from Ethiopia.
The
employees told CNN the staff could manually turn off the ADS-B signal on board
to prevent the flights being publicly tracked.
The
flights were often assigned the same flight numbers, primarily ET3312, ET3313
and ET3314, with 'ET' being the code for Ethiopian Airlines. All the planes
mentioned in the cargo files seen by CNN are American-made Boeing aircraft. The
airline has been in a long relationship with the US aviation giant.
A
Boeing representative declined to comment.
Ethiopian
Airlines workers described witnessing other airline employees loading and
unloading arms and military vehicles on flights directed to Asmara. A few even
claimed they helped load the weapons on the planes themselves. All spoke of
being ethnically profiled for being Tigrayan.
CNN
has seen the Ethiopian Airlines' ID cards of these employees and confirmed
their identities.
One
former employee told CNN they were instructed at Addis Ababa's Bole
International Airport to load guns and four military vehicles onto an Ethiopian
Airlines cargo plane that was due to fly to Belgium but was sent instead to
Eritrea.
"The
cars were Toyota pickups which have a stand for snipers," the employee
said. "I got a call from the managing director late at night informing me
to handle the cargo. Soldiers came at 5 a.m. to start loading two big trucks
loaded with weapons and the pickups."
"I
had to stop a flight to Brussels, a 777 cargo plane, which was loaded with
flowers, then we unloaded half of the perishable goods to make space for the
armaments."
The
former employee warned soldiers that the vehicles were carrying far more gas
than was allowed under international air transport rules, but said they were
overruled after a direct call from an army commander.
"He
[the commander] said we are going to war and we need the fuel to be
loaded," the employee said. "Then I referred the issue to my manager
and my manager took responsibility and allowed them to load it."
The
flight, loaded with both weapons and flowers, traveled to Eritrea, then
returned to Addis before flying on to Brussels the following day, the employee
said. CNN cross-referenced this testimony with Flightradar24 and found the
record of an Ethiopian Airlines aircraft returning from the direction of
Eritrea and flying to Brussels the next day, but could not independently verify
it was the same flight referred to by the employee.
Days
later, the employee said they were temporarily suspended from work. They
believe they were suspended for being Tigrayan but also for the incident with
the soldiers. The employee fled Ethiopia in March.
Ethiopian
Airlines told CNN in its statement that no employees had been suspended or
terminated due to their ethnic background.
It
appears to be not the only long-distance international flight with unplanned
stops. A flight from Addis Ababa to Shanghai on November 9, 2020, took a long
detour via Eritrea according to the ADS-B signal that tracks the route on
Flightradar24.
Several
employees at the Addis Ababa airport said they saw multiple weapons flights
leave for Eritrea each day at the outset of the conflict. They also spoke about
flights carrying weapons from Eritrea back to Ethiopia. It's unclear why
armaments were being transferred back to Ethiopia.
One
said they saw tanks and heavy artillery loaded onto planes coming to Addis
Ababa, while small arms -- mortars, launchers -- were dispatched to Asmara.
Employees told CNN they believed the smaller weaponry were being sent to Asmara
to arm Eritrean troops.
All
the employees said they were instructed by the airline to delete photos of the
weapons from their phones. Not all of them did.
In
June, photos circulated on social media platforms showing crates containing
mortars on board an Ethiopian Airlines flight and the same crates being loaded
on the plane in Massawa, Eritrea.
The
company released a statement strongly denying the allegation that its planes
were transporting weapons and claimed the photos were photoshopped.
However,
CNN has corroborated the photos using visual analysis techniques, interviews
and documentary evidence, dating them to a 777 Freighter cargo flight that flew
from Ethiopia to Eritrea and back between November 8 and 9.
The
images show a variety of mortars stacked up in the crates. Dan Kaszeta, a
London based defense specialist and an associate fellow at the Royal United
Services Institute, identified the mortars as 832-DU 82mm mortar rounds,
originally made in Russia but with many versions subsequently manufactured,
including in Bulgaria.
CNN
has contacted the Bulgarian government and reached out to Bulgarian arms
producers but received no response. According to the EU's public database,
Bulgaria sold weapons to Ethiopia as recently as 2020.
Another
image features an employee wearing a uniform that matches with the Ethiopian
Airlines uniform. The interior of the plane also fits the layout of an
Ethiopian Airlines 777F cargo plane. The expiry date of the Emirates SkyCargo
straps tightened around the crates -- November 2023 -- can be seen in the
photos. Since these particular types of cargo straps -- TSO C172 -- have a
lifespan of three years, they would have been used in November 2020 at the
earliest. CNN has confirmed that these Emirates SkyCargo straps have been used
on other Ethiopian Airlines flights.
A
representative for TSO C172 cargo straps manufacturer AmSafe Bridport declined
to comment. CNN has sought comment from Emirates SkyCargo.
CNN
has learned that the cargo plane in question took off on November 8 from Addis
Ababa empty before landing in Massawa, where local workers were tasked with
manually loading it with a variety of weapons, including these mortars.
A
cargo manifest from that day, seen by CNN, confirms the flight was empty when
it reached Massawa.
A
screenshot from the Ethiopian Airlines internal database taken by an employee
and sent to CNN reveals a flight on November 8 to Massawa that is hidden from
flight tracking sites. The weapons were then dropped in Bahri Dar, Ethiopia,
before the aircraft returned to Addis Ababa on November 9.
Several
aviation experts CNN spoke to on these findings said Ethiopian Airlines
appeared to be in violation of the Convention on International Civil Aviation,
commonly known as the Chicago Convention, which prohibits commercial carriers
from transporting "munitions of war or implements of war."
Pablo
Mendes de Leon, professor of air and space law at The Hague, told CNN there are
several indications that these flights were commercial flights -- not military
or state aircraft -- including "that [the flights] carry a commercial
flight number of Ethiopian Airlines in conjunction with the fact that an airway
bill has been issued."
"I
have now arrived at the conclusion that [these flights have] been operated by
civil aircraft falling under the terms of the Chicago Convention," Mendes
de Leon said, adding that CNN's findings "have a lot of legal
repercussions and conditions, all of which may not have been met."
Ethiopia's
status as a regional economic powerhouse is partly dependent on Ethiopian
Airlines' dominance in cargo. The country and the airline have benefited from
an American trade program that provides favorable access to the US market for
countries that meet certain criteria.
This
relationship matters for both countries: in 2017, US exports to Ethiopia
consisted primarily of aircraft and aircraft components from Boeing, valued at
more than $857 million.
But
a clause in the US African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA) stipulates that
eligible nations must not engage in "gross violations of internationally
recognized human rights."
Previous
CNN investigations found atrocities committed by the Ethiopian government and
its allies bore the hallmarks of genocide and ethnic cleansing.
In
late August, US Trade Representative Katherine Tai warned Ethiopia's chief
trade negotiator that "the ongoing violations of internationally
recognized human rights" in Tigray "could affect Ethiopia's future
[AGOA] eligibility if unaddressed."
On
Tuesday, a spokesperson told CNN that Tai's office would conduct its next
review of eligibility for AGOA in 2022, "based upon compliance with
standards that include adherence to internationally recognized workers' rights,
rule of law, and human rights." After the review, Tai could "possibly
recommend that the President add or remove certain countries from AGOA
beneficiary country status."
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